One thing which will always be remembered regarding that Cornell trip, and that is the reception given the team and those connected with it by Hobart College at Geneva, N. Y. The Big Green were the guests of Hobart all day Friday, and they were treated royally by this little college of 500 students, who greeted them and turned over the entire athletic plant including their football field to Hawley and his men. No more cordial relations than were manifested could have existed, and Dartmouth men should hold Hobart in high esteem.
In looking back over the past four games, it is just a question of what might have been. The injury jinx, which struck here with such force that it was inexplainable, left the team without an offense, and when you take away the offense a team is gone. The collapse of the line at Harvard is one of those things which cannot be explained. Yale outplayed them, and so did Brown, and by the time the Cornell game came around, a different forward wall was seen in action, with different results.
With Wolff, Breithut and Marsters on the shelf during the heart of the season, the forward passing attack was all gone, and the team struggled along with unfamiliar offtackle plays, and even resorted to a lateral pass now and then, which was not so good.
BOOMA SPOILS A BRUIN PLAY The Dartmouth end has side-stepped the Brown interference shown in the center, headed by Captain Cornsweet (without headguard). lhe play started as a lateral pass and a wide end sweep. Booma (78) threw Fogarty, the Brown runner for a ten-yard loss. It was the outstanding defensive play of the game from the Dartmouth standpoint.